Extractions: NASHVILLE, Tenn. Paul Kariya signed Friday with the Nashville Predators , the left winger's third team in three seasons. Advertisement The 30-year-old forward spent his first seven NHL seasons with Anaheim, helping the Mighty Ducks reach the Stanley Cup Finals in 2003. Then he joined up with former teammate Teemu Selanne, and the pair signed free agent deals with Colorado for the 2003-04 season. "They showed a commitment to me that I was the guy they wanted to bring to Nashville, and I was very excited about their hockey club," Kariya said by telephone. "I think it's a great young hockey club that's only going to get better. I'm really excited about the speed and the goaltending. With the new rules changes coming, I think it's only going to benefit Nashville." Paul Kariya has scored 311 goals and has 705 points in 10 seasons.

Legends Of Hockey NHL Player Search Player Paul Kariya NHL Player Search. paul Tetsuhiko kariya He made the trek north to Penticton,a hockey factory that produced such stars as Andy Moog and Brett Hull, http://www.legendsofhockey.net:8080/LegendsOfHockey/jsp/SearchPlayer.jsp?player=

Inside College Hockey | Pro-file: Paul Kariya For fans of college hockey, paul kariya will always be that amazing freshman Inside College hockey caught up with kariya at the landmark St. paul Hotel, http://www.insidecollegehockey.com/7Archives/QAs/kariya_0131.htm

Extractions: Pro-file: Paul Kariya By Jess Myers For fans of college hockey, Paul Kariya will always be that amazing freshman from Maine, putting on a clinic in Milwaukee in 1993, and skating back to Orono with the NCAA title and the Hobey in tow. It might surprise some to realize that this is Kariya's ninth season in the NHL, and that fresh-faced kid in the Black Bears sweater is now a 28-year-old veteran who has seen the good and the bad of the pro game's battles. With the NHL's Western Conference Finals set to begin in St. Paul, Kariya's seventh-seed Mighty Ducks were battling the sixth-seed Wild not only on the ice but to determine who was the playoffs' true Cinderella story. On the heels of the Angels' improbable run to the World Series title, most were giving the nod to the team that plays just down Katella Avenue from Cinderella's castle at Disneyland. Inside College Hockey caught up with Kariya at the landmark St. Paul Hotel, in the heart of Minnesota's capital city, for a talk about pucks and the off-ice tragedies that have made the past few years a challenge for the Ducks' perpetually up-beat captain.

Extractions: American Handgunner American Hunter, The American Rifleman Auto Racing Digest ... View all titles in this topic Hot New Articles by Topic Automotive Sports Top Articles Ever by Topic Automotive Sports Getting Better all the Time - Paul Kariya of the Anaheim Mighty Ducks - Interview Hockey Digest Feb, 2001 by Ashley Jude Collie Save a personal copy of this article and quickly find it again with Furl.net. It's free! Save it. The Mighty Ducks star seeks to improve not just from year to year, but with each practice and each game AFTER THE FIRST MONTH OF the 2000-01 season, the Pacific Division, the NHLs new black-and-blue group, had all five teams in the early playoff hunt. Last season, only the Ducks failed to make the playoffs from the Pacific. This season, Anaheim enjoyed a franchise-best start in October, earning six wins in the month.

Nashville Predators Predators owner Craig Leipold and GM David Poile introduced paul kariya to We are proud and excited to bring one of the National hockey League s most http://www.nashvillepredators.com/

Extractions: Steve Sullivan turns with the puck during Wednesday's scrimmage. Sullivan's Group A team will face Group C Friday morning at Centennial Sportsplex. When time expired in regulation play for Thursdays training camp scrimmage at Centennial Sportsplex, Greg Johnsons Group B was on the losing side of a 4-1 result against Scott Walkers Group C. In the shootout session that followed, though, goals by four of the five Group B shooters and a strong performance by goaltender Chris Mason thrilled those in attendance and stole the spotlight back. Forward Brandon Segal opened the scoring 20 minutes into the game, which consisted of two 30-minute periods, a five-minute four-on-four session, and a shootout. It was the second of three such matches scheduled for the first week of camp. The third pits groups A and C against each other at 10 a.m. Friday.

OLYMPICS/NAGANO 1998 The plan was to divert the hockeydeprived country with paul Tetsuhiko kariya,who, at least in Japan, is the most famous hockey player ever. http://www.time.com/time/reports/olympics/kariya.html

Extractions: Robert Beck for TIME "Actually, I'm 5 ft. 9 and, like, 3/4 inches. It doesn't matter, now that I've proved myself." Paul Kariay Canada's Headache By JOEL STEIN od Brind'Amour stepped off the bullet train in Nagano and took a hard check to the ground. But the crush of Japanese fans was actually gunning for Wayne Gretzky, who, after fleeing to the Team Canada bus, said, "I've been in a lot of places, but I've never seen anything like this." It wasn't supposed to go this way for the Great One. The plan was to divert the hockey-deprived country with Paul Tetsuhiko Kariya, who, at least in Japan, is the most famous hockey player ever. But Kariya, 23, a fourth-generation Canadian of half-Japanese heritage, isn't part of the first 125 NHL players to participate in the Olympics. The man Hockey News named the best player in the world was stateside nursing a concussion received on Feb. 1, when he took a stick to the head while celebrating a goal. Kariya was grounded by doctors last Thursday. It was, he told Team Canada general manager Bob Clark, "the worst day of my life." The guy who held the offending stick, Gary Suter, despite an NHL suspension, will be playing for the U.S. That makes Canada mad. Canada has been harboring a grudge since 1966, when the two teams last met and the U.S. shocked its northern neighbor by winning the World Cup. Canadians began to rethink their national plan (More funding? A youth movement? Abandon NAFTA?), but what really upset them was learning that hardly anyone in the U.S. even knew about the contest. It's one thing to import Canadian NHL teams to southern U.S. cities, steal SCTV guys for SNL, infringe on fishing rights, but to beat them at their own sport? This could get ugly.